So over the last few weeks now I've been trying to see what options I have to boost my system performance while playing SWTOR (Getting 10FPS in Warzones & 1 to 2 minute load screens) and unfortunately it appears I'm going to need to get pretty much an entire new setup.

This time I want to do it right, I don't want to just go spend $500 at the local bestbuy for some random rig with a built on GFX Card..

I also didn't really see the point in building a COMPLETELY new rig when I could just get a reasonable barebones kit + a GFX Card then use my HDD, SSD & Disk Drive.

I spent the day looking at Tigerdirect and this is what I believe looks like something in my budget $600-$800. Note: I was also considering the GFX Card they offer if you buy it and wasn't sure if it was worth it.

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I also wanted to say that I know building PC's for some people is something they absolutely love to do, a hobby or maybe even their profession so if you can make a better recommendation (within the same general price range) than PLEASE PLEASE do so.

I don't care if I have to order a case from Asus, CPU from Newegg and other crap from Tigerdirect.. as long as once it's all ordered the PC & Price is good I'm pretty easy to please.

Work that magic!

Thanks again for everyone being so helpful.

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Not sure what kind of a discount they are giving for packaging those together but I'd go with a Z68 over a P67 mobo if possible. Although for what you might be using it for it may not matter too much. Here's a pretty good article detailing the differences.

Definitely... The i5-2500k is one of the best processors on the market. However it largely depends on what video card you choose. The 520 is getting a bit dated but should be able to handle SW decently. I'd look at a 560 or Radeon 6870. Both are a bit more pricey but you should be able to run most new games at max settings (might have to disable AA).

Sorry kinda short and hurried. Trying to get out the door.

Edit: The 520 isn't really considered a "gaming" card, it's more just a multi media card. And 50$ sounds about right, you aren't getting much of a discount. If you skimp on the vid card that's definitely going to be your bottle neck in that system.

Gab wrote:Not sure what kind of a discount they are giving for packaging those together but I'd go with a Z68 over a P67 mobo if possible. Although for what you might be using it for it may not matter too much. Here's a pretty good article detailing the differences.

Definitely... The i5-2500k is one of the best processors on the market. However it largely depends on what video card you choose. The 520 is getting a bit dated but should be able to handle SW decently. I'd look at a 560 or Radeon 6870. Both are a bit more pricey but you should be able to run most new games at max settings (might have to disable AA).

Sorry kinda short and hurried. Trying to get out the door.

Edit: The 520 isn't really considered a "gaming" card, it's more just a multi media card. And 50$ sounds about right, you aren't getting much of a discount. If you skimp on the vid card that's definitely going to be your bottle neck in that system.

Good review, looks like quite a nice change for not much more money..

Would you be able to recommend a build using that? or would you just say to sub that in w/ everything else?

I was worried about the GFX card listed I'm willing to spend a little more to get a good one.

Thx again for the help.

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Honestly, if you're mostly gaming, it'll be hard to get into a situation where your video card is NOT the bottleneck. I have a Radeon 6970, and it's the bottleneck in almost every game I play (the couple that are CPU-limited generally run at 100+ FPS). That's with a CPU that is quite a bit slower than a 2500k (I have an i5 760). I wouldn't cut it too far - having a good quad-core CPU is important for some games, and will get more so as time goes by; so I'd try and stick with an i5. But certainly, once you're over a certain minimuum CPU level (and an i5 is well above that), a better CPU makes very little difference in games, and the video card is the main bottleneck.

So if the only systems-intensive thing you are doing with the computer is playing games, it's probably worth spending less on the CPU, and sinking the extra money into the graphics card. I could nitpick at the bundle some more (an 850W power supply with a motherboard that doesn't support SLI/Crossfire? Why waste all that money on something you'll never really use), but instead I'll do something productive and post some recommendations.

Better option:$42.99 Corsair 8GB Desktop Memory Kit - 8GB (2x 4GB), PC10666, DDR3-1333MHz, 9-9-9-24 Latency, 240-pin DIMM, 1.5V$89.99 MSI H67MA-E35 B3 Intel 6 Series Motherboard$189.99 Intel Core i5-2400$59.99, $10 rebate Corsair CX500 Power supply$99.99 Corsair Carbide 400R$249.99 Gigabyte GV-R695OC-1GD Radeon HD 6950 Video Card --OR--$234.99, $15 Rebate GV-N560OC-1GI GeForce GTX 560 Ti Video CardPrice: $732.94 ($722.94 after rebates) with Radeon, 717.94 ($687.94 after rebates) for the Nvidia. Will let you play any current game maxxed out at 1080p, basically. The two video cards are about the same speed; choose based on which company you'd prefer; or just go with the Nvidia card because it's cheaper. Also note that there are two Geforce 560 models: The Geforce 560 (no Ti) is quite comparable with a Radeon 6870; the Geforce 560 Ti is quite a bit faster; and comparable with the 6950.

If you want to overclock, replace the motherboard with a P67 or Z68 chipset one, and the 2400 with a 2500k, and buy a decent aftermarket CPU cooler (Coolermaster Hyper 212+ or 212 Evo is cheap and good). Overclocking isn't hard, but getting a faster CPU isn't exactly a massive boost as far as gaming performance goes.

As far as building the computer goes: It's mostly just following instructions. Find a youtube video to make sure you don't forget anything, but the only vaguely tricky thing is installing the heatsink over the CPU. Just take it slow, be careful, and don't force anything. Most of it is just plugging different bits into wherever on the motherboard they'll fit.

Talaii wrote:As far as building the computer goes: It's mostly just following instructions. Find a youtube video to make sure you don't forget anything, but the only vaguely tricky thing is installing the heatsink over the CPU. Just take it slow, be careful, and don't force anything. Most of it is just plugging different bits into wherever on the motherboard they'll fit.

Luckily I know (enough of) my way around installing or changing out components so I'm not too worried about the assembly.

I could be wrong but I had recently read that a proper overclock can net you a large FPS increase in gaming sometimes more than a GFX card upgrade.

Also I heard Intel has horrible heatsinks / fans so if I overclock then I would HAVE to buy replacements, anyone else know about this?

Once again, thanks for the help this feedback is all very useful and I'm weighing my options and I truthfully can't see myself waiting more than just a day or so to make an order.

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Talaii wrote:As far as building the computer goes: It's mostly just following instructions. Find a youtube video to make sure you don't forget anything, but the only vaguely tricky thing is installing the heatsink over the CPU. Just take it slow, be careful, and don't force anything. Most of it is just plugging different bits into wherever on the motherboard they'll fit.

Luckily I know (enough of) my way around installing or changing out components so I'm not too worried about the assembly.

I could be wrong but I had recently read that a proper overclock can net you a large FPS increase in gaming sometimes more than a GFX card upgrade.

Also I heard Intel has horrible heatsinks / fans so if I overclock then I would HAVE to buy replacements, anyone else know about this?

Once again, thanks for the help this feedback is all very useful and I'm weighing my options and I truthfully can't see myself waiting more than just a day or so to make an order.

There is some truth to that, my graphic benchmarks make a rather large improvement when I overclock my CPU/memory, which indicates I have some head room on the gfx card. Obviously, it will depend a bit on the setup though, and that will not always be the case. I bought a high end gfx card with a CPU that I knew overclocked well, but wasn't the top end clock speed at the time because that costs a premium.

Now that said, mine still handles SWTOR without any problems without overclocking, so I don't bother. My computer was built from scratch using pretty good components, so it was reasonably expensive for a pc (probably around $1300 sans monitor) but here it is 5 years later and it doesn't break a sweat on stuff like SWTOR.

Looking at the cases I was pleased to find the Corsair 500R for just $5.00 more (After $15 Rebate) than the Corsair 400R!

The Corsair Carbide Series 500R is an upgraded version of the 400R. You get a 200mm side fan, three step fan speed controller, support for a 240mm radiator, air filter on the top panel, hard drive bays in a two-cage configuration, and support for longer video cards if the hard drive cage is removed.

I don’t know what a “radiator ” is or how to operate a “Fan speed controller ” but I can say that for $5.00 the extra fan & the Hard Drive Cages seem to be a no brainer upgrade .

*Edit Addition*Crap.. looked at the bundle deal for the 400R & Corsair 430W Power Supply and now I can't tell which is a better option..

WTB 500R + CX CPU bundle to be a happy camper.. LOL

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Better option:$42.99 Corsair 8GB Desktop Memory Kit - 8GB (2x 4GB), PC10666, DDR3-1333MHz, 9-9-9-24 Latency, 240-pin DIMM, 1.5V$89.99 MSI H67MA-E35 B3 Intel 6 Series Motherboard$189.99 Intel Core i5-2400$59.99, $10 rebate Corsair CX500 Power supply$99.99 Corsair Carbide 400R$249.99 Gigabyte GV-R695OC-1GD Radeon HD 6950 Video Card --OR--$234.99, $15 Rebate GV-N560OC-1GI GeForce GTX 560 Ti Video CardPrice: $732.94 ($722.94 after rebates) with Radeon, 717.94 ($687.94 after rebates) for the Nvidia. Will let you play any current game maxxed out at 1080p, basically. The two video cards are about the same speed; choose based on which company you'd prefer; or just go with the Nvidia card because it's cheaper. Also note that there are two Geforce 560 models: The Geforce 560 (no Ti) is quite comparable with a Radeon 6870; the Geforce 560 Ti is quite a bit faster; and comparable with the 6950.

If you want to overclock, replace the motherboard with a P67 or Z68 chipset one, and the 2400 with a 2500k, and buy a decent aftermarket CPU cooler (Coolermaster Hyper 212+ or 212 Evo is cheap and good). Overclocking isn't hard, but getting a faster CPU isn't exactly a massive boost as far as gaming performance goes.

Just wanted to expand on your options a bit.

The 6870 still performs quite well. For the first recommendation it's only a ~20$ dollar increase and for the second reccomendation it would be a ~70$ decrease. Depending on what make you get.

As far as the i5-2400 why not just spend the extra 30$ and get the 2500k? A better chip with a lot more potential for overclocking. Even if you don't plan on ocing atm it's still a very cost effective upgrade and there is always the option to tweak the thing out.

If you plan on overclocking and are not all that savvy most of the Z68 boards are much more friendly for ocing although some P67s aren't bad as Talaii said.

Also agree the power supply is extreme over kill, you could save some money there, although you still want a decently rated one. A 500W is more than enough for any of the above rigs.

Edit 1: Just saw this on Tom's. Interesting breakdown of video cards by price point with links to all of their original full card reviews. Might be worth a look for you.

and Edit 2: A breakdown of performance by video card and game settings for Star Wars, sadly the 6870 was not tested. The system that was used for the test is similar to what you plan on building, might give you a better idea of what you are looking for. Keep in mind the 460 is SLI mode.

I went to Newegg and searched "Radeon HD 6870" and got like 6 results with varying prices that all appear to be the exact same thing..

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Shyrtandros wrote:Also I heard Intel has horrible heatsinks / fans so if I overclock then I would HAVE to buy replacements, anyone else know about this?

Yeah if you decide to OC it buy a Coolermaster Hyper 212 or 212 evo like previously suggested. They are only $30 and $35 respectively and I have seen the 212 on sale for as low as $20 or so. Don't rely on the stock fan.

If I buy this I'll slap my 680G HDD for storage in it, my 120G SSD for gaming in it & drop my current DVD/R/W in it. My SSD already is running Win 7 Home Premium.

Please let me know if there is something I should change or add, as always your feedback is awesome.

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I think you'll be happy with the 6870, it's a great card for the price especially at $150. And with a slew of new cards coming out in the near future I wouldn't want to spend $250 on a card that could potentially drop quite a bit in price.

The only thing you want to make sure of with that particular 6870 (it's a beast) is that it will fit in the case properly. I'm almost positive that your case will fit it just fine though; but ya know... CYA and all that.

As for the rest of the rig, looks great to me.

EDIT: It appears the Double D can run at up to 9 degrees celsius cooler under load than competitor cards due to the cooling system. Explains why the card is a bit bigger than other 6870s.

Yeah, the huge cards usually have better coolers (which usually just means quieter; they can work the fans less). They are annoying if you want to crossfire, though; and they tend to move hot air around inside the case (whereas the reference "blower" coolers exhaust it directly out the back). Which again is only a big deal if you're trying to crossfire them.

And throw in a Coolermaster Hyper 212 plus for $25 if you're going to be overclocking. It's not the best heatsink available, but it's ridiculously cheap for how well it cools. Plus it bolts onto the motherboard rather than using pushpins. Which is a good thing, pushpins are a terrible, terrible mounting solution.

Apart from that, everything looks good. I hear some complaints about the intel boards, but I've had good experiences with them personally. And they actually have an intel network chip, which are much, much better than the realtek/atheros/broadcomm ones most motherboards have.

I hate mail-in rebates. They're bordering on being an outright scam, at least in my experience. So I don't count those in the final price - anything that actually WORKS, rebate-wise, is just a bonus movie ticket a couple months later when it finally arrives.

I would probably go extra-large on the case, if I were you. Try the Antec 900 - it's a pretty massive beast, with plenty of room to work inside, and it'll fit the largest of the large components inside. It's not SUPER-cheap, coming in at $100 (sans power supply, sadly) at Newegg, but it'll last you decades. DECADES.

Alright, I couldn't handle waiting anymore.. the upgrade bug bit me HARD... Here's my order..hope I didn't screw up anything.I dropped in the recommended Cooler Master & a Wrist Strap.. yeah I've played with PC guts w/o one before but for $6 I'd rather be safe than deal with sending a component.

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For under $800, it certainly looks good! Nice job! Good choice on the video card brand, too, I've heard good stuff about XFX's warranties.

Needing to use their warranty worries me more than the quality of their warranties..

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What I meant was, I'd heard stories about things like RMAs within a year, no questions asked, and generally good customer service during the process. I've never bought one, but I've been happy both with ASUS and Sapphire cards too. I just meant that it looked like it was a good choice on your part

Ordered Graphics Card because it looked cool and was on sale...Turned out to be good choice.<Insert Success Meme>

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